IO-9 Eclesis
io-9 eclesis
XNET full: blorkk.com/io-9
analysis: blorkk.com/aboutio9

Eclesis of Blorkkan Moon Io-9


This is the first footage from our ku we have to send to Okuaka.  This is a fractal lunar eclipse-genesis of one of our obscure moons.  Kolphin happened to pass by it one day and named it "Io-9" for its similarities to your Jupiter's Io in the Sol System of the Milky Way galaxy.  Primarily he says he discovered it was exactly nine times the size of Io, and simultaneously, only one ninth its size.  As with everything else he does, we figure Kolphin is either the Ramanujan of your ku, or fracolic Okuakan space dolphins are just plain retarded when it comes to math.


We call this an "eclesis" (eclipse-genesis) which may seem a bizarre idea to you, but keep in mind we're sort of another entire known universe, remember.  The sciences of Blorkk and Okuaka are very foreign to each other and we're just beginning to harmonize the two and communicate with you.  We found it just as strange that your moons continue to exist once they are eclipsed, as you must think it strange that ours cease to exist. At the beginning and end of an eclesis, there is nothing but the eclipse. There is no matter, no sun or moon, as both cease to exist once the sun is no longer seen and the moon is black. By thought, a core phylo principle of ours (shared with the philosophers at the big crunch of your Okuaka, and a couple silly Harvard professors of your current day) is that if something doesn't appear to exist, then it doesn't.  That perception defines reality, as put by Jumper the Mutant Orion Frog.

In the case of an eclesis, this is also confirmed by our sciences and physicists, although of course, no one can scientifically prove that this isn't because they're just horribly deficient in the ability to detect anything that doesn't appear to be there.  So, here is the footage of a rare eclesis of what Kolphin calls Io-9. It begins with the eclipse (instead of it being at the mid-point like an Okuakan eclipse), and Io-9 begins to form, and finally exists in full physical form for a split moment (the genesis), then returns to the nonexistent vague idea of a circle of light.  Our physicists are now theorizing that this moment aligns precisely with the inverse moment of some moon in your Okuaka (the point where one of your moons are fully eclipsed).

We're calling it a "fractal" eclesis because you seem to have some mathematical algorithms that allow your computers to simulate these sorts of things in pure math, and the formation of Io-9 is definitely what you'd call fractal physics. Perhaps from another point of view, it was just rendered on a program and posted for fun, but to us, all points of view (real, mathematical, and fictional) can exist simultaneously, as your phylors at the big crunch of Okuaka agree.  In any case, please check back in a few thousand kilonanits at which point we mot or mot not have some more detailed footage for you.


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